About Me

Thursday, August 23, 2007

To give you an impression of how good this book was, I got off the bus yesterday and couldn’t close the book.I walked to my car still reading, with an occasional glance at the ground to make sure I wasn’t going to trip or get run over.I didn’t even want to stop reading long enough to drive the one mile home.I actually contemplated if there was a way I could read all the way home and not wreck.(You’ll be happy to know I decided this wasn’t possible.)

A Thousand Splendid Suns, by Khaled Hosseini, is the story of two women who grow up in Afganistan.One is Mariam, the bastard child of a rich businessman with three wives and his former housekeeper, the other is Laila, the daughter of a progressive school teacher and his wife, born 19 years later.Their lives eventually intertwine, and it is at that point that I couldn’t stop reading.

First of all, I knew Afghanistan has been at war and in political flux for a while, but until reading this book, I had no idea the turmoil Afghan people have lived through over the past 30 years in particular.It makes me want to go off and work for the UN.A Thousand Splendid Suns gives us insight into the true effect of war and revolving governments in Afghanistan by allowing us to peer into the lives of these two women and witness the struggles and tragedies—and joys—they face.

Khaled Hosseini makes you think about honor, love, happiness, endurance, sacrifice… makes you question your own allegiances, your own strength in facing hardship… makes you appreciate even more the comfortable American life you live, where you may not agree with the choices made by the government, but you aren’t punished for that disagreement.He makes you wish there was something you could do about the atrocities happening to human beings around the world… leaves you hoping for a better life for the Afghan people.

On my way back from a conference in Toronto in May, I found myself finished with all the books I had brought and with a lot of time to sit in an airport (oh, how I love Delta).So I wandered into the airport bookstore and discovered The Devil and Miss Prym by Paulo Coelho.I choose books by opening to the first page and reading it. If I feel like I need to read more, then I buy it (or borrow it).With The Devil and Miss Prym, I was totally hooked and loved the story.When I was done, I made a mental note to read more by this author.

Last week, I decided to take a break from buying books and went to the library instead.I searched for Coelho and found By the River Piedra, I Sat Down and Wept.It is the story of a woman and a man who grew up together and, in their teens, find themselves in love.He, however, has a wanderlust that takes him out to explore the world, while she stays close to home in pursuit of a stable, secure life.After years apart, he calls her and they meet again and we learn that his feelings for her have never wavered, while she has become convinced that he is not the man for her.

When you read By the River Piedra…, you feel like you’re somewhere in a small mountain village in South America, sitting by the fire and listening to one of the village elders telling a folk story.You know there is a moral (in fact, the story is practically overflowing with moral guidance), but you are so enchanted with the story that you don’t feel preached to and you hardly notice that you’re being taught a lesson.The Devil and Miss Prym was the same way—you come away from Coelho’s stories feeling enlightened, yet like you’ve just been told a really good (grown-up) bed time story.I love it, and I’ll be reading more of Coelho’s work.

I try to be good about mixing up actual meaty literature (like 1984) with good old fashioned storytelling.The kind where you can devour the book in a couple of days because you can’t wait to see what happens.James Patterson has always been reliable for a great mystery and a fun, easy read.Jack and Jill was no exception.

Jack and Jill is part of the series of Alex Cross detective novels.Cross is a homicide detective living in not-the-best neighborhood in Washington, DC.He is a good, moral guy with a great family and close friends… the kind of guy you’d like to know and that you hope every police officer is like.

In this book, there are two series of killings that Alex Cross must solve.Jack & Jill are two killers who are randomly killing famous people around DC, and another killer is brutally murdering young children in Cross’s neighborhood.From the very start, I was hooked and couldn’t wait to solve the crime with Detective Cross.

By the end of Jack and Jill, I was again left pondering our government, but I won’t say much more than that because you should read this book yourself.Let’s just say that now that I think about it, maybe Big Brother is controlling things a little more than I’d like to believe….

When I graduated from college, I decided it was time for me to read all those classics that either never ended up on my high school reading lists or I faked my way through in English class.(Yes, I did fake my way through some of those books in high school… YOU try reading Treasure Island because you have to!)I went to a used book store (back then, there was no Cracked Book, but there was something similar…) and stocked up.I must have bought 15 “classics,” from The Great Gatsby to Cry the Beloved Country to 1984.And I read… I think maybe one of them.

But!I never got rid of them.So a couple weeks ago when I had finished Harry Potter but hadn’t had a chance to get to the book store, I decided it was time for me to plow into George Orwell’s 1984.Especially because that book was probably THE most widely read and referenced of the books I bought.

Well, now at least I have some reference when people talk about the book.It was alright… but I won’t read it again.It was interesting to see the perspective of a man writing in the 1950’s predicting 30 years into the future.Jeez, talk about doomsday!1984 tells us the story of a society where every move you make is monitored by Big Brother and the Thought Police and history is rewritten on a daily basis to conform to Big Brother’s ideology.Pretty spooky.Our antagonist, Winston, decides that he really doesn’t agree with the crap that’s being forced into his mind, and this book tells the tale of Winston’s exploration of defying Big Brother.

I think I would have enjoyed this book a little more if Orwell hadn’t launched into about 20 pages of pseudo-political commentary in the middle of the book.Psh!Who needs that crap! I just wanted to know what happened to Winston!

When I finished this book, my first thought was, “Alright, that’s over with.”My second thought was, “Jeez, it’s a good thing that’s not REALLY how things are… I think….”It is disturbing to think of a society where the government has so much power that they can literally erase and rewrite history and have people believe it.It’s disturbing to think of a society where the government is watching your every move.And yet our government is given more and more leeway every day to poke around in our private lives… I’d like to think we’ll never end up in a world like George Orwell predicted in 1984, but some days, I wouldn’t be surprised.

Friday, August 3, 2007

Ah yes, the moment I had been waiting for for 2 years came just 2 short weeks ago... the release of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the seventh and final book in J. K. Rowling's amazing series. This release was the biggest of my life--never have I anticipated a movie or book or video game or electronic device or ANYTHING like I anticipated this book. And if that makes me a dork, that's alright. The day I spent with this book probably makes me a bigger one. :)

I savored every moment of this book as I have each of the other six in the series. There is something about the way that Jo Rowling writes that isn't necessarily the most amazing prose ever written, but it draws you in to the story as though you are right there, perhaps as though you've gone into the pensieve (for those of you who have read any Harry Potter! if not, don't worry about it. :) ).

Deathly Hallows shows us a very grown up Harry Potter, a very determined and, ultimately, resolved young man who has found himself in a battle to the death with Evil. His friends Ron and Hermione are by his side in this battle, and the trio is a great symbol of how important friendship can be.

I don't have a lot of analysis of this book because I feel like that would be analyzing my friends' lives. Isn't that weird? Well, if you haven't read these books, that should tell you something. By the time you're done, your family will have grown. Not that I have an ill word to say about any of them... more than anything, it was brilliant to have so many loose ends wrapped up. I was very satisfied with the way the book ended, but I will admit I shed a few tears for a few of the deaths.

Seriously, go pick up Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone if you haven't yet. You won't regret it. And if for some reason you've read the first six books but not this one yet, what are you waiting for?!

When Kurt Vonnegut died earlier this year, I realized that I had never read a book by this legendary author. I talked to a girl I work with who raved about his work, and know a guy who does the same. So I put him on my mental list of "Authors I Must Read" and went about my business. A few weeks ago, while I was attempting to fill time until Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows came out, I picked up Slaughterhouse Five from The Cracked Book.

I had sort of anticipated Vonnegut reading like William Faulkner: slowly. I was wrong. Slaughterhouse Five was a very quick read, I read it in just one week of bus rides. :) The story is of Billy Pilgrim, a World War II veteran who becomes "unstuck" in time after being abducted by aliens. Sound wacky? It is, a bit. But it's funny and tragic, too. Billy, in the war, witnesses the bombing of Dresden, which I knew nothing about and sounds horrific. Slaughterhouse Five is a war story, but the statement made is in regards to the product of war: a man who can find no true place in his life and seems to sort of go through the motions, looking for purpose, basically lost.

Perhaps I'm wrong and that wasn't what Vonnegut meant at all. Perhaps Billy really was abducted by Trafalmadorians. But in this day of war, how many stories do we hear of men who come home completely changed and with difficulty readapting to pre-war life? When I think of Billy Pilgrim, I see a man who witnessed and experienced the hard and tragic realities of WWII and came home and came up with a new reality. Because wouldn't we all like to find some way to come to terms with the violence and sadness in the world? That's what Billy does.

If I'm perfectly honest, while I was reading this book, I was entertained, but kept thinking, "What's so great about this?" Kurt Vonnegut has a reputation for being a great American writer, but on first glance this book was just an amusing story. Reflecting, you can see there is much more to Slaughterhouse Five than meets the eye. Perhaps I'll go back and read it one day when I'm not rationing out the pages to make sure I finish at precisely the right hour to go get my Harry Potter book. :)